TIFF Review: Slumdog Millionaire
By J.D. McNamara: 2008-09-11 01:46:32 
  Buzz up!    Just like an actor taking different roles to avoid being typecast,
Danny Boyle continually reinvents himself as a filmmaker. That is of
course, precisely why he is such an exciting filmmaker. Each of his
films is a total original in its own way, yet they all have that same
edgy flare which has come to define his work. The drug laced drama 
Trainspotting put him on the map, the zombie-slasher 28 Days Later kept him 
there, and the stunning sci-fi thriller Sunshine solidified his place as one of 
the most malleable talents in the
industry. What type of rabbit will he next pull from his hat? Ever the
experimentalist, Boyle has remained true to his genre-jumping nature by
taking us straight into the beating heart of modern India for his
latest film, Slumdog Millionaire. 

Set in the ghettos of Mumbai, Slumdog follows the
story of Jamal (Dev Patel), a poor but big-hearted boy who, along with
his slightly erratic brother Salim, is forced to fend for himself from
a very young age. Bouncing from city to city and seemingly always
avoiding trouble by the slimmest of margins, the brothers and their
“Third Musketeer”, Latika (Frieda Pinto), live their lives in a
perpetual state of survival, fighting to exist from one minute to the
next. 

As the years pass and the colorful events of their lives lead the three
friends along separate paths, they lose touch and settle into somewhat
normal lives. Jamal finds himself on India’s version of Who Wants to Be A 
Millionaire,
and in a position he surely never thought possible: answer one question
and win millions of dollars. But when the powers that be deem it
impossible for a “slumdog” without an education to advance so deeply
into the show, he faces the ultimate question: are you lucky, are you
cheating, or is it truly your destiny? As Jamal’s past comes hurtling
back to him in waves of bittersweet memories, he is confronted by the
toughest test of his life; one that will not only affect those closest
to him, but also the nation and culture which defines him. 

Slumdog is a magnificent film, because Boyle paints a true and
genuine portrait of a India’s cultural society using the unlikeliest of
stories as his canvas. It’s irrelevant whether Jamal wins any money on
the show, thus it doesn’t matter if it’s even a plausible event. Yet
the way in which Boyle weaves Jamal’s tale around the gripping suspense
of Who Wants to Be A Millionaire infuses the film with a
palpably intense energy and atmosphere. His young and mostly unknown
cast is exceptional, as they work from a tightly written script.
Screenwriter Simon Beaufoy’s writing calls for sequences of romance,
friendship, action, humor, despair, betrayal and greed, and Boyle
captures the essence and mood of each scene with impressive scope and
clarity. Whether it’s a dizzyingly effective sequence of canted camera
angles or a dazzling handheld take, Boyle’s style is composed of
countless intangibles. 

With Slumdog Millionaire,
Danny Boyle has done it again. He’s made a film ‘ drastically different
from anything in his filmography, yet done as such a high level that it
he’s been perfecting this particular genre for years. Slumdog Millionaire is 
surely one of the year’s best cinematic experiences, and the
standing ovation it received at my Toronto International Film Festival
screening was well deserved. 

(4.5/5)

http://www.cinemablend.com/new/TIFF-Review-Slumdog-Millionaire-10141.html

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